Initial studies show underwater habitats and species are recovering successfully in California's new marine protected areas.
New discoveries reveal alarming increases in jellyfish in the oceans, and scientists suspect the causes could be overfishing and global warming.
Wily and opportunistic, coyotes have moved steadily eastward and are now found almost everywhere in the United States.
With an expanding network of acoustic receivers on the ocean floor, researchers track tagged animals and provide accurate data on life cycles and migrations of marine life.
Architects and Conservationists in New York City seek building designs that are less hazardous to birds.
Experts say climate change is one reason conflicts with black bears are increasing in California's Lake Tahoe area.
Conservationists try to save an ancient species from declining habitat and growing threats from predators.
Scientists warn that California's famous crystal-clear lake is seriously threatened by global warming.
Successful ecotourism on the Osa peninsula raises new challenges.
Under the protection of the Endangered Species Act, the recovery of America's national symbol is now hailed as a major success story.
In the old-growth forests of the Pacific Northwest, northern spotted owls face an aggressive competitor and new plans to remove protection for their habitat.
Biologists use new techniques to monitor the recovery of gray bat populations in protected cave habitats.
In a vast region in arctic Alaska, wildlife conservationists and the U.S. government square off for a major battle over proposed oil and gas leasing.
New York City is on the front line of a desperate war against a sneaky invader.
Giant salamanders in the Ozark mountains are disappearing, and scientists are trying to find the cause.
In northern California, global warming is apparently causing glaciers to grow, not shrink, on Mount Shasta.
An ambitious plan for a giant wind farm project off the the coast of Cape Cod in Massachusetts has divided environmentalists and pitted residents against each other.
In the southeastern U.S., land managers are using fire to restore ancient prairie habitat.
With poachers threatening the survival of this insect-eating plant, marking them with dye helps to prosecute thieves.
Volunteer pilots offer aerial views of environmental damage.
New York City is pioneering the use of tidal flows to generate electric power.
Flowing down the Mississippi, fertilizer runoff has a devastating effect in the Gulf of Mexico, creating a vast area devoid of life.
In America's Southeast, growing population pressures are forcing states to compete for limited water supplies.
After 150 years of mining and logging left a huge environmental disaster zone in southeastern Tennessee, massive cleanup efforts are showing positive results.
Following years of civil war in southern Sudan, wildlife herds are thriving but facing new peacetime perils.
In Florida, recovering populations of manatees still face serious threats from collisions with motorboats.
Conservationists return black bears to Louisiana's forests where the animals haven't lived for decades.
Large areas of Louisiana's cypress forests, critical for storm protection, are being clearcut for garden mulch.
AJust a few dozen miles from Manhattan, bald eagles have been re-introduced and are thriving in New York's Hudson River Valley.
After annual counts showed moose herds declining in Wyoming -- with wolves, bears and habitat quality sharing blame -- a lone researcher studies the mystery with surprising results.
Restoring healthy flows of fresh water in dammed and polluted rivers can be monitored by tracking endangered fish with radio transmitters.
In the southeastern United States, cave-lovers find that buying caves is one sure way to protect them.
Ecologists try to transform ditches into natural streams needed to bring healthy hardwood forests back to the Mississippi Delta in Arkansas.
A colorful amphibian is a celebrated symbol of a campaign to save green space in Homewood, Alabama.
After an absence of nearly 200 years, North America's largest rodent has returned to New York City.
Deep in an Arkansas swamp three years ago, David Luneau says he filmed a few fleeting seconds of a bird believed extinct, and he's still searching.
A major stopover site for migrating cranes in Tennessee is threatened by high-density development plans for surrounding land.
Last year's election results in Wyoming show many sportsmen will ignore party affilations on issues affecting conservation of public lands.
In India, a rare crocodilian clings to survival in a river sanctuary threatened by aggressive human encroachment.
In a river in Tennessee, field researchers brave freezing water to find and study a little-known endangered species.